Not all ads are created equally sleazy. The privacy harms from surveillance ads, though real, are often hard to pin down. But there's another kind of ad - or "ad" that picks your pocket every time you use an ecommerce site.

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If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/11/29/aethelred-the-unready/#not-one-penny-for-tribute

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This is the "sponsored listing" ad, which allows merchants to bid to be among the top-ranked items in response to your searches - whether or not their products are a good match for your query. These aren't "ads" in the way that, say, a Facebook ad is an ad. These are more #payola, a form of bribery that's actually a crime (but not when Amazon does it):

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Payola#U.S._investigations_and_aftermath

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Payola - Wikipedia

Amazon is the global champion of payola. It boasts of *$31 billion* in annual "ad" revenue. That's $31 billion that Amazon sellers have to recoup from you. But Amazon's use of #MostFavoredNation deals (which requires sellers to offer their lowest prices on Amazon) mean that you don't see those price-hikes because sellers raise their prices *everywhere*:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/25/greedflation/#commissar-bezos

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Pluralistic: How Amazon makes everything you buy more expensive, no matter where you buy it (25 Apr 2023) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

Forget Twitter: Amazon search is the poster-child for enshittification, in which Amazon locks you in (for example, with a year's shipping prepaid through #Prime) and then you get recommended worse products while sellers make less money and Amazon pockets the difference.

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Sellers who don't sell on Amazon are dead in the water, because most US households have Amazon Prime and overwhelmingly, Prime users start their search on Amazon, and, if they find the goods they're seeking. After all, they've prepaid for shipping.

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So sellers suck it up and pay a 45-51% Amazon tax and pass it on to us - no matter where we shop. Many of the #JunkFees sellers pay are related to Prime and fulfillment, but an increasing share of the Amazon tax comes from the need to pay to "advertise," because if they don't buy the top result for searches *for their own products*, their competitors' ads will push them right off the first page (those competitors spend money on advertising, rather than manufacturing quality).

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There's a lot of #YOLO/#ROFLMAO in those ads: search for "cat beds" and 50% of the first five screens are ads - including ads for *dog* products, apparently bought by companies adopting a spray-and-pray approach to advertising. Someone selling a quality product still has to outbid all of those garbage sellers:

https://pluralistic.net/2022/11/28/enshittification/#relentless-payola

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Pluralistic: How monopoly enshittified Amazon/28 Nov 2022 – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

This is at the root of #AmazonsPricingParadox: while Amazon can defend itself against regulators by citing sellers whose prices are lower and/or whose quality is higher, it's nearly impossible for *shoppers* to get those deals. If you click the top result for your search, you will, on average, pay 29% more than you would if you found the best bargain on the site:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/11/06/attention-rents/#consumer-welfare-queens

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Pluralistic: Amazon is a ripoff (06 Nov 2023) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

What's more, you can't fix this by simply sorting by price, or by reviews, or some mix of the two. The sleaziest sellers have mastered tricks like changing the number of units they sell so the total price is lower. For example, if batteries are normally sold $10 for a four-pack, a sleazy seller can offer batteries at $9 for three units. A lowest-to-highest price-sort will put this item ahead of a cheaper rival.

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Researchers found that getting a good deal at Amazon requires that you make a multifactorial spreadsheet by laboriously copy/pasting multiple details from individual listing pages and then doing sorts that Amazon itself doesn't permit:

https://scholarship.law.bu.edu/faculty_scholarship/3645/

There's an exception to this: Amazon and Apple have a cozy, secret arrangement to exclude these "ads" from searches for Apple products. But if you're shopping for anything else, you're SOL:

https://www.businessinsider.com/amazon-gives-apple-special-treatment-while-others-suffer-junk-ads-2023-11

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Amazon's Pricing Paradox

Antitrust scholars have widely debated the apparent paradox of Amazon seemingly wielding monopoly power while offering low prices to consumers. A single company’s behavior thereby helped spark an intellectual renaissance as scholars debated why Amazon’s prices were so low, whether antitrust enforcers should intervene, and, eventually, how the field should be reformed for the era of large online platforms. One of the few things that all parties have agreed upon amidst those contentious conversations is that Amazon offers low prices. This Article challenges that assumption by demonstrating that Amazon charges higher prices than commonly understood. More importantly, unraveling the disconnect between perception and reality yields broader insights. One of the reasons why perceptions of Amazon’s pricing have remained disconnected from reality is that conversations about regulating Amazon have paid inadequate attention to behavioral economics. Behavioral economics reveals how the company leverages its sophisticated algorithms and large datasets to build a marketplace of consumer misperception by, for instance, making it difficult to find the lowest prices. Such practices undermine competition, in the uncontroversial economic sense of the word. But these practices reside in the domain of consumer law, not antitrust. Thus, a behavioral consumer lens is necessary to see that what was originally framed as an antitrust paradox is better viewed as a pricing paradox. To see the full set of concrete legal solutions for promoting competition in Amazon’s marketplace and beyond, it will be important to move consumer law out of antitrust’s shadows. These two bodies of law operating at full force offer the best chance for an era of open retail.

Scholarly Commons at Boston University School of Law

These payola markets are bad for buyers, and they cost sellers a lot of money, but are they at least good for sellers? A new study from three business-school researchers - Vibhanshu Abhishek, Jiaqi Shi and Mingyu Joo - shows that payola is a very bad deal for good sellers, too:

https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3896716

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After doing a lot of impressive quantitative work, the authors conclude that for good sellers, showing up as a sponsored listing makes buyers trust their products *less* than if they floated to the top of the results "organically." This means that buying an ad makes your product *less* attractive than not buying an ad.

The exception is sellers who have *bad* products - products that wouldn't rise to the top of the results on their own merits.

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The study finds that if you buy your mediocre product's way to the top of the results, buyers trust it more than they would if they found it buried deep on page eleventy-million, to which its poor reviews, quality or price would normally banish it.

But of course, if you're one of those good sellers, you can't simply opt not to buy an ad, even though seeing it with the little "AD" marker in the thumbnail makes your product less attractive to shoppers.

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If you don't pay the #danegeld, your product will be pushed down by the inferior products whose sellers are only too happy to pay ransom.

It's a system where everybody loses - except monopoly ecommerce platforms, who enshittify everything and rake it in.

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Tonight (November 29), I'm at #NYC's Strand Books with my novel The Lost Cause, a #solarpunk tale of hope and danger that Rebecca Solnit called "completely delightful."

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/cory-doctorow-the-lost-cause-tickets-734958008187

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Cory Doctorow: The Lost Cause

Eventbrite - The Strand Book Store presents Cory Doctorow: The Lost Cause - Wednesday, November 29, 2023 at Strand Book Store, New York, NY. Find event and ticket information.

Eventbrite